The Morley George Lynch Tripler Pedal lets you route one guitar to up to three amps. A lot of players, including George Lynch, want to be able to hook up 3 amps and switch each independently or in any combination. Morley has designed the Tripler to do this, and at George's request, added a boost knob that increases the signal strength of the entire Tripler output to compensate for lost volume when using all 3 channels simultaneously. The Morley Tripler is housed in a cold rolled steel case for years of use and abuse. Comes with LED indication for each channel and runs on one 9V battery or optional Morley adapter. Morley gives you a 2-year warranty with the George Lynch Tripler.

FEATURES

Links up to 3 amps and switches independently or combines them in any way

Boost knob compensates for volume loss when 3 channels are used simultaneously

I have had my tripler since August 2007.It works great AFTER I found the sorce of the hum.The factory customer care was very unhelpful and gave wrong information (said all equipment should be...Read complete review

I have had my tripler since August 2007.It works great AFTER I found the sorce of the hum.The factory customer care was very unhelpful and gave wrong information (said all equipment should be on "different" circuits!). They only wanted to SELL more stuff, not find the problem.What I found was the inside paint is insulating the switches and causing a ground hum. Simply take out the switches (do not unsouder) and scrape the paint away from where they touch the metal box when they are put back. Do this on the inside of the box. Hum is gone.Then you have a good product.

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Most Liked Negative Review

tripler- problem fix

I got mine a month ago and I put up with all kinds of static and hum, which would go away for awhile when you touched it. Tech Support was useless. They only...Read complete review

I got mine a month ago and I put up with all kinds of static and hum, which would go away for awhile when you touched it. Tech Support was useless. They only want to sell something else. The fix is open it up, take out the switches, remove paint from the inside of the box around the switches especially the grounding lug. Then the unit was quiet. Poor ground from the factory was the problem.

What I like about the unit , is that it doesn't affect the natural sound f my amps . I was originally running a 40 hz warfedale pro Sho Together with a 45Hz Warfedale 15" and a 12". Through my Mark Bass AmpThe high 135 SPL of the pro Sho tended to dominate my sound as it is so responsive, compared to my other cabinet running a 15" and a 12 " . I prefer a fairly toppy sound but some of the stuff we play needs a lot of bottom end so I just hit the button and wham O , get a result.I now run my second amp and the Pro Sho on the other side of the stage so it fills the sound out real well.The pedal is well built and robust , clear and easy to read. I haven"t had any problems with unwanted noise as other reviewers have suggested .It Has really diversivied my sound and now I can't do without it .

Read the reviews about scraping the paint off around the footswitches. It worked!!I bought this pedal along with the Rolls RFX ABY32 to split my signal between the Yamaha Magicstomp pedals and my amps. After doing some research on this pedal I decided to buy it because it does 3 amps at a time. Decided to try this at a gig and the hum was unbearable. Always check your gear at home first as a rule of thumb.Now that I scraped the paint off the inside under the switches and inside the hole where the switches go it now sounds just like I wanted it to without the hum!Thank you all for posting the fix!

Ok, This pedal have a good heavy contruction, but what porpouse can have, if morley dont isolate the outputs? may be, that way they can sell you the hum eliminator, or the hum X, either way, this is a bad item, incredible hum appears almost always. better go to voodoo labs amp selector.SplitterGood construction but no isolationkind of cheap

I have had my tripler since August 2007.It works great AFTER I found the sorce of the hum.The factory customer care was very unhelpful and gave wrong information (said all equipment should be on "different" circuits!). They only wanted to SELL more stuff, not find the problem.What I found was the inside paint is insulating the switches and causing a ground hum. Simply take out the switches (do not unsouder) and scrape the paint away from where they touch the metal box when they are put back. Do this on the inside of the box. Hum is gone.Then you have a good product.

It works great for me. Yes there is some hum, but I'm running three tube amps. There's no more hum than usual. I'm running a Fender 65 Twin Reverb, Fender Blues Devile 410, and a Bugera 333XL combo. I dial them in for the sound I need out of each and go for it. For some solos I run the overdriven Bugera with the clean reverb in the Blues Deville. It runs both of them very nicely. Now, I have the boost dial turned all the way down. The more I turn it up, the louder the hum gets. So, keeping it down seems to do the trick. For the price, it runs my three amps just fine.

I'm not sure what these other reviewers could be doing to get such poor performance but mine works great. I use it to split my signal into an old Yamaha GEP-50, and two Rockman Sustainors. From there it goes into a Yamaha PA head. I don't hear any hum or noise at all. The case is Morley tough and the switches are nicely spaced. I'm very pleased.

i bought one of these and returned it the next day as soon as a second amp was hooked in the hum was unbearable, and why buy this and a hum x when you can spend a little more and get the voodoo labs switcher and get it all in onedon't waste your money

I got mine a month ago and I put up with all kinds of static and hum, which would go away for awhile when you touched it. Tech Support was useless. They only want to sell something else. The fix is open it up, take out the switches, remove paint from the inside of the box around the switches especially the grounding lug. Then the unit was quiet. Poor ground from the factory was the problem.